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Israel Adesanya won a legion of new fans with his thrilling unanimous decision win over legend Anderson Silva in Melbourne on Sunday — but his status as the true No. 1 contender to Robert Whittaker's crown has been thrown into question by some pointed criticism from within the UFC fraternity.

The 29-year-old kickboxing specialist declared himself the No. 1 contender after stealing the show at UFC 234 at Rod Laver Arena — ignoring the chaos caused to the middleweight division by Whittaker's collapsed bowel and intestinal hernia that required emergency surgery on the morning of the event.

UFC boss Dana White now finds himself in the impossible position of having promised both Adesanya and American Kelvin Gastelum the next shot at Whittaker's belt.

With no clear timeframe for Whittaker's return Adesanya is now facing a potentially extended wait on the sidelines until after an expected Whittaker-Gastelum showdown in 2019 — or the prospect of having to fight again, possibly against No.3 contender Jacare Souza, without a belt on the line.

Adesanya finds himself in the difficult position of having cemented himself as a top contender with his dominant win over Silva — while also failing to do enough to make it impossible for White to overlook him when it comes time for him to meet with UFC match makers on Tuesday.

He also failed to do enough to win over some of his UFC rivals.

American Chris Weidman led the criticism, suggesting he is not convinced Adesanya is the real thing just yet.

At 5-0 in the UFC, Adesanya is unbeaten in his 12 months in the promotion, but there remain doubts about his wrestling and ground game.

Main reason this could be true is Adesanya's matches in the UFC haven't challenged his (perceived) weaknesses, so they have not helped him mature as a mixed martial artist. Threat of a takedown changes his striking dynamics in important ways. And if he can't stop a TD then what? https://t.co/pHpc5Wfq8T

If you were one of the many who expected Israel Adesanya to starch Anderson Silva, curious what you think now that a 43-year-old Silva was competitive and went the distance with him. Does it mean anything? Does he deserve a title shot after this? Genuinely curious.

#IsraelAdesanya seems to enter a 'flow state' with ease. Its fascinating to watch. I can only imagine it's from doing something he really loves along with 1000s of hours of flow sparring. Would love to know more, just a matter of time before he has the belt.

It's the one-year anniversary of Israel Adesanya's UFC debut. 5-0 in that time. Mauled Brad Tavares, knocked out Derek Brunson, stepped up and beat Anderson Silva in a main event. That's the type of start longtime champs are made of.

Adesanya's fast lips did get him into trouble on Sunday in front of the Melbourne crowd after he appeared to take a shot at Whittaker for his failure to defend his belt.

"I showed up to work, a lot of people didn't, even though it's out of their hands, sometimes it's not in their control," Adesanya said, clearly disappointed that the forecast trans-Tasman title showdown has been scrapped for now.

White said on Sunday he will begin planning the middleweight division with a meeting on Tuesday where he will have the futures of Gastelum and Adesanya in his hands.